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Hollywood Crowds Into New Orleans
News Max ^ | Sept. 7, 2005 | James Hirsen

Posted on 09/06/2005 4:33:18 PM PDT by conservativecorner

James Hirsen's "Left Coast Report" follows:

Hollywood's elite didn't miss a beat in using Hurricane Katrina to launch a political attack on the Bush administration – or to seek publicity for themselves.

While many of the stars' actions have been well-intentioned, some sought to turn the hurricane tragedy to their own political advantage and to further an agenda that seemingly blames Bush and the GOP for all of the world's ills – even a natural disaster.

According to some on Hollywood's political fringe, whether it's global warming, the wetlands, the funding for levees, racism, the tax cut or the president's vacation, Hurricane Katrina and the devastation that ensued is somehow the fault of George W. Bush.

It's a further indication of a growing trend explored in my new book "Hollywood Nation: Left Coast Lies, Old Media Spin and the New Media Revolution," which reveals how Hollywood elites are increasingly blurring the lines between entertainment and news to force their views on the rest of the country.

The opportunistic villains in the Katrina tragedy include:

Sean Penn, a vociferous critic of President Bush, traveled to New Orleans and criticized authorities for what he perceived as a lack of support for the victims. "There are people dying and (the U.S. government is) not putting the boats in the water. I think that's criminal negligence. I don't think anybody ever anticipated the criminal negligence of the Bush administration in this situation."

Penn's personal crusade to rescue stranded victims hit a snag when his small boat – which also carried his personal photographer – sprang a leak and began taking on water.

No wonder he complained on one interview that authorities have yet to provide a place for people to rinse off the sludge from their bodies after wading through flood waters.

Pierce Brosnan took advantage of the spotlight at the Deauville film festival in France to say: "This man called President Bush has a lot to answer for. I don't know if this man is really taking care of America. This government has been shameful."

On his weekly TV show, Bill Maher told his audience that the natural disaster was caused by global warming.

Bush-basher Michael Moore, in a posting on his Web site, wrote that "those pesky scientists" had "predicted this would happen because the water in the Gulf of Mexico is getting hotter and hotter, making a storm like this inevitable." He further mocked the president with the comment, "Ignore them and all their global warming Chicken Littles." According to Moore's theory, hurricanes didn't exist before man-induced global warming happened. And in left-looped logic, Bush is to blame for the hurricane because he failed to submit Kyoto to another losing vote. (The Senate disposed of the treaty 1995 to nothing in the 1999 vote.) Regarding efforts to improve the levees protecting New Orleans, Moore maintained that Bush "specifically reduced the Army Corps of Engineers' budget for New Orleans this summer for the third year in a row," adding that there was a "much more important construction job for them - BUILDING DEMOCRACY IN IRAQ!"

Moore is apparently still having problems with his fact checking. Sadly, even with full funding, none of the flood-control projects would have been completed in time to prevent the surge of water that rushed over the city. And on another woeful note, a concrete wall that was breached had already been completely upgraded in accordance with plans that spanned several administrations.

During NBC's live broadcast of "Concert for Hurricane Relief," rapper Kanye West told viewers that National Guardsmen were given orders to shoot African-Americans in New Orleans. West said when African-Americans were caught stealing in New Orleans "they were called looters," but when whites were caught they were "just feeding their families." He then suggested that "George Bush doesn't care about black people." NBC producers promptly cut away before West could go any further.

Angelina Jolie took a dim view of the massive relief efforts in the stricken region, saying, "It is wonderful to hear of the relief efforts that are finally coming to New Orleans and the rest of the region, but as well all know, it is simply not going to be enough." She sent letters to members of Congress and the White House asking them to increase aid efforts.

Media celebrities also fell prey to the urge to use the hurricane to attack Bush. Nancy Giles of CBS claimed that the war on poverty is being lost because of the Bush tax cuts, and that since he visited Iraq but not the New Orleans Superdome, Bush doesn't "give a damn" about black people. The idea that the president would intentionally withhold assistance to any of our people who are in need in such desperate times is so out of line with the character of the man, statements like these are self-refuting.

On Location at the Devastation: New Orleans

Other celebrities refrained from sharply criticizing Bush or the relief efforts, but jumped at the chance to showboat and garner some of the media spotlight.

Oprah Winfrey visited New Orleans, then traveled to the Astrodome in Houston, where she spoke of the "inhumane" and "embarrassing" conditions displaced people were forced to live in.

She also said she would be presenting her show live from the area to ensure that their "stories would be told."

Dr. Phil McGraw also hopped on the bandwagon, paying a visit to the Astrodome that was taped for airing on the future show. John Travolta flew to Louisiana on his private jet to deliver food to hurricane victims.

Crooner Harry Connick Jr., who is from New Orleans, visited the stricken city soon after the hurricane struck and questioned why authorities couldn't get to the people holed up in the convention center.

For sure, Hollywooders have a right to voice their opinion – just like everyone else. But in a time of emergency and crisis, should celebrities be floating through New Orleans in row boats looking for photo ops? Is this the future of newsfotainment?

Good Celebrity Stuff

Celebrities who have been out front trying to use their people power to help Americans in need have shown the "right stuff" and deserve to be lauded.

Last week, Matt Lauer hosted an NBC fund-raising telethon featuring Connick, Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Mike Myers, Aaron Neville, Kanye West, Hilary Swank, Lindsay Lohan, Glenn Close, Richard Gere, John Goodman and Leonardo DiCaprio.

Jerry Lewis added hurricane victims to the recipients of his Labor Day telethon.

Alan Jackson agreed to headline a concert at the Grand Ole Opry. BET made plans for a benefit telecast starring Stevie Wonder, Chris Rock, Brandy, Diddy, Usher, Alicia Keys and Wynton Marsalis.

ABC, CBS and Fox are currently collaborating on an Ellen DeGeneres-hosted one-hour live broadcast, which will reportedly be similar to the post-9/11 "A Tribute to Heroes" telethon.

MTV, VH1 and CMT announced they would hold a joint benefit featuring Ludacris, Green Day, Gretchen Wilson, Usher, Alicia Keys, John Mellencamp and Dave Matthews Band.

"Hollywood Nation"

The intrusion of celebrities into national events and politics exemplifies how Hollywood is trying to set the news agenda. As my book "Hollywood Nation" details, the entertainment world has a subtle but powerful influence in shaping public opinion.

Media moguls, with their politically charged films, distorted documentaries and skewed docudramas, are trying to set the agenda with little regard for the truth.

Even worse, some so-called journalists are mixing information and entertainment in an attempt to ratchet up ratings – and inject their own views into the news.

The Knock Iraq/Blame Bush Game

Often those views are at direct odds with the facts.

Some folks who are opposed to the war are trying to tie our military presence in Iraq to the Katrina response, claiming that if those members of the National Guard who were in Iraq had been available, they would have stopped the looting and shooting and been able to rescue everyone.

This talking point with a Democratic scent is making the media rounds. Jesse Jackson recently took to the airwaves and made reference to the "five-billion-dollar-a-month war in Iraq."

The numbers here don't really work out. Only 12 percent of our military forces are in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait. Louisiana actually had plenty of guardsmen available.

The tragic truth is the number of troops wasn't the problem. Getting to the area was. Interstate 10 and other highways had collapsed and the roads were flooded.

Media Missteps

While much of the media coverage deserves praise, some demands criticism.

Just prior to the disaster, we remember how the media seemed to be immersed in a 24-hour Aruba-oriented news cycle. Initially some appeared to take this same type of approach to the hurricane coverage.

The result was a sense of a stretch for the sensational without the sensitivity needed to correspond with the unfolding crisis.

Most striking in contrast are the set of media standards that were in place following 9/11 and the moving of the marker that seems to have occurred with some of the hurricane disaster coverage.

Following 9/11, in deference to those who had lost life and in consideration of viewers' sensibilities, the media generally avoided showing pictures of the bodies of the deceased. With the hurricane catastrophe, though, many of the networks repeatedly showed images of people who had died, sometimes with makeshift coverings strewn over their lifeless forms.

When we think about mainstream media's frequent left-of-center take on events and issues, we realize that the potential for selective coverage exists even in the face of a national disaster. Unfortunately, in this regard, some media networks remained in bias mode.

Less than stellar leadership on the part of local and state officials escaped scrutiny while negative remarks about President Bush garnered ample airtime. Party affiliation appeared to be the "newsworthy" deciding factor.

On one occasion, CNN's Jack Cafferty asked, "Where's President Bush? Is he still on vacation?

"Based on his approval rating in the latest polls, my guess is getting back to work might not be a terrible idea."

As if fresh from a Cindy Sheehan rally, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann reported that "8,000 Guardsmen from Mississippi and Louisiana who might have helped, might have been deployed in the relief efforts are, in fact, in Iraq and not in Mississippi and Louisiana."

And MSNBC anchor Lisa Daniels dourly characterized trucks arriving with emergency supplies as "too little too late."

While discussion is warranted to determine whether 72 hours is a reasonable time for a federal response to a crisis of this proportion, for some opportunists appropriate analysis gave way to political sniping.

Truth Be Told

A few facts are in order:

President Bush declared Louisiana a disaster area two days before the hurricane struck the New Orleans area. President Bush urged New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin and Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco to order the mandatory evacuation that was issued on Sunday, August 28. First responders to a disaster are always state and local emergency agencies. FEMA is there to supplement the state and local activities. The hurricane threatened an area as large as 90,000 square miles covering three states. Immediate relief could not possibly have been delivered to all the places that required attention. An AP photo showed a large fleet of New Orleans buses soaking in six feet of water. The mayor apparently had the means to evacuate many of the folks who ended up stranded at the Superdome and the convention center. FEMA began its activities immediately, not expecting the magnitude of the flooding, the non-response at the city and state level, and the anarchy that resulted. The local and state governments had rehearsed for a different scenario. Disaster drills in New Orleans had taken place, but with a false assumption that the levees would hold. Both the law and protocol prohibit the president from ordering military troops into a state without a formal request to do so from the governor of the affected state. A Final Note

On August 29 Hurricane Katrina roared into the Gulf region, crushing cities, severing families and destroying lives. Here on the Left Coast our arms stretch out to surround those who grieve. And though our hearts ache at the sight of the devastation and the toll this disaster has taken, our lips join in prayer and our spirit in hope that God will wipe away every tear, work out all things for good and heal our land.

The Left Coast Report is written by James L. Hirsen and the staff of NewsMax.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: doperah; hollywood; hurl; katrina
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1 posted on 09/06/2005 4:33:19 PM PDT by conservativecorner
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To: conservativecorner

If there is a such thing as "global warming" it's caused by these useless idiots flapping their gums.


2 posted on 09/06/2005 4:35:24 PM PDT by RasterMaster (Saddam's family were WMD's - He's behind bars & his sons are DEAD!)
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To: conservativecorner

why was sean pennnn wearing a bulletproof vest?


3 posted on 09/06/2005 4:37:10 PM PDT by pipecorp (Let's have a CRUSADE! , the muslims have already started. 1600 replies and not a single post!)
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To: conservativecorner
Thank goodness Hollywood is on the way!

This tragedy has me down, and I need a little lifting of the spirits.

Got a good boost yesterday from reading about Sean Penn and his "entourage" getting freeped by the people they were there to rescue.

Besides, the idea of a "heroic rescuer" who travels with an entourage tickles my funny bone.

4 posted on 09/06/2005 4:38:08 PM PDT by TontoKowalski
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To: conservativecorner
entertainment world has a subtle but powerful influence in shaping public opinion.

Like Shelley said 'poets (all artists really) are the unacknowledged legislators of the world'
5 posted on 09/06/2005 4:39:34 PM PDT by Borges
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To: conservativecorner
For sure, Hollywooders have a right to voice their opinion – just like everyone else. But in a time of emergency and crisis, should celebrities be floating through New Orleans in row boats looking for photo ops? Is this the future of newsfotainment?

THE FIRST AMENDMENT IS THE FIRST REFUGE OF A SCOUNDREL!!!

6 posted on 09/06/2005 4:41:09 PM PDT by Captainpaintball
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To: conservativecorner

That's all the troops need, a bunch of useless idiot actors who have never done an honest day's work in their lives. I guess they need some camera time to jump-start their sagging careers. General Honore should tell those losers to pick up a shovel and get to work or get their butts out of the AO!

BTW, that photo of Admiral Sean Penn bailing out the USS Gnarly with what looks like a Slurpee cup should be enlarged and put on a billboard!


7 posted on 09/06/2005 4:42:27 PM PDT by billnaz (What part of "shall not be infringed" don't you understand?)
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To: conservativecorner

It was worth it all to see Sean Penn complaining about incompetence and then bailing his little boat..unsuccessfully...


8 posted on 09/06/2005 4:43:10 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: Captainpaintball
But in a time of emergency and crisis, should celebrities be floating through New Orleans in row boats looking for photo ops? Is this the future of newsfotainment?

Generally, I feel those in the arts should stick to what they do best. In addition, I detest Sean Penn, but I have to come to his defense:

He could hardly do a worse job than Blanco and Nagin.

9 posted on 09/06/2005 4:44:22 PM PDT by TontoKowalski
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To: conservativecorner
According to Moore's theory, hurricanes didn't exist before man-induced global warming happened.

I love this line--perfectly sums it up. And Hurricane Andrew, in 1992, was whose fault? I mean, Kyoto came along 3 years later...and Clinton didn't sign it then... And it's as if Bush, in signing the Kyoto Protol (not his job anyway, as treaties are left to the Congress...) would have reversed the "cause" of global warming in the few years he's been in office...riiiiiiiiggggggghhhhhhttttt.... And what about these--I suppose they are Bush's fault, too, despite the fact that there largely weren't any "man made" pollutants to blame: # Great September Gale of 1815--Was the last hurricane to strike New England before the Long Island Express of 1938. The storm struck on September 23, 1815, and brought an 11 foot storm surge to Providence, which was the highest storm surge in the Rhode Island captial prior to the Great Hurricane of 1938, which had a 17.6 foot storm surge. This storm was the first hurricane to strike New England in exactly 180 years. # Cape May Hurricane of 1821--The last major hurricane to make a direct landfall in the Garden State of New Jersey. This storm, which was a Category Four Hurricane, struck Cape May, New Jersey on September 3, 1821, and had hurricane force winds go as far west as Philadelphia while folks in New Jersey experienced wind gusts of up to 200 mph. The storm cut a path of destruction that is similar to that of the Garden State Parkway. More detailed information on this hurricane is at Greg Hoffman's Real Lousy Weather Page. # Galveston Hurricane of 1900--The deadliest natural disaster in United States History, this Category Four Hurricane moved through Cuba into the Gulf of Mexico before slamming ashore in Galveston, Texas on September 8, 1900 killing 6,000 people. Or Hurricane Hugo, in '89, long before the Kyoto Protocol...
10 posted on 09/06/2005 4:44:33 PM PDT by jcb8199
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To: conservativecorner

Why does Hollywood think "red staters" give a damn they are down there showboating?


11 posted on 09/06/2005 4:45:03 PM PDT by Soul Seeker (Barbour/Honore in '08)
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To: conservativecorner

I don't get it. They're telling all N.O. residents to get out under threat of arrest, yet celebs are allowed in. Classism!


12 posted on 09/06/2005 4:45:41 PM PDT by uncitizen
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To: conservativecorner
Both the law and protocol prohibit the president from ordering military troops into a state without a formal request to do so from the governor of the affected state

This is true but isn't it also true that the President can order national guard troops whenever and whereever he pleases...if the situation warrants?

Didn't x41 order the national guard into Watts in 1993 without a formal request?

13 posted on 09/06/2005 4:45:46 PM PDT by GSWarrior
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To: conservativecorner
According to Moore's theory, hurricanes didn't exist before man-induced global warming happened.

I love this line--perfectly sums it up.

And Hurricane Andrew, in 1992, was whose fault? I mean, Kyoto came along 3 years later...and Clinton didn't sign it then... And it's as if Bush, in signing the Kyoto Protol (not his job anyway, as treaties are left to the Congress...) would have reversed the "cause" of global warming in the few years he's been in office...riiiiiiiiggggggghhhhhhttttt....

And what about these--I suppose they are Bush's fault, too, despite the fact that there largely weren't any "man made" pollutants to blame: # Great September Gale of 1815--Was the last hurricane to strike New England before the Long Island Express of 1938. The storm struck on September 23, 1815, and brought an 11 foot storm surge to Providence, which was the highest storm surge in the Rhode Island captial prior to the Great Hurricane of 1938, which had a 17.6 foot storm surge. This storm was the first hurricane to strike New England in exactly 180 years.

# Cape May Hurricane of 1821--The last major hurricane to make a direct landfall in the Garden State of New Jersey. This storm, which was a Category Four Hurricane, struck Cape May, New Jersey on September 3, 1821, and had hurricane force winds go as far west as Philadelphia while folks in New Jersey experienced wind gusts of up to 200 mph. The storm cut a path of destruction that is similar to that of the Garden State Parkway. More detailed information on this hurricane is at Greg Hoffman's Real Lousy Weather Page.

# Galveston Hurricane of 1900--The deadliest natural disaster in United States History, this Category Four Hurricane moved through Cuba into the Gulf of Mexico before slamming ashore in Galveston, Texas on September 8, 1900 killing 6,000 people.

Or Hurricane Hugo, in '89, long before the Kyoto Protocol...

----Repost, I know--FORGOT HTML TAGS!!!
14 posted on 09/06/2005 4:46:33 PM PDT by jcb8199
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To: conservativecorner

I could stomach about two minutes of Oprah today. I did catch her telling her entire viewing audience that "YOU OWE the citizens of New Orleans an apology."


15 posted on 09/06/2005 4:48:00 PM PDT by bluegrass
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To: conservativecorner

Hirsen bttt


16 posted on 09/06/2005 4:49:20 PM PDT by Christian4Bush (The modern Democratic Party: Attacking our defenders and defending our attackers.)
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To: TontoKowalski
In addition, I detest Sean Penn, but I have to come to his defense: He could hardly do a worse job than Blanco and Nagin.

No. Blanco and Nagin had the sense to stay out of NO. Penn had to be rescued.

17 posted on 09/06/2005 4:49:45 PM PDT by mtbopfuyn (Legality does not dictate morality... Lavin)
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To: conservativecorner

"Some folks who are opposed to the war are trying to tie our military presence in Iraq to the Katrina response, claiming that if those members of the National Guard who were in Iraq had been available, they would have stopped the looting and shooting and been able to rescue everyone."


When the right ties the war in Iraq to the war on terrorism the left scream and whine. Now they are tying the war in Iraq to a f**king hurricane. Give me a break!!!


18 posted on 09/06/2005 4:49:49 PM PDT by hophead (" Enjoy Every Sandwich WZ")
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To: billnaz
You hit it right on the head. When these leftcoast morons aren't bizitchin' about the dreaded Paparazzi(sp) dogging their every step and trying to "invade their privacy", they (the stars), spend their time trying to figure out how to get the Paparazzi(sp)to invade their privacy and snap a couple of pics.

It sort of lends itself to the old grade school adage:(with apologies to grade schools everywhere)

The Paparazzi(sp)chase the movie stars until the movies stars catch them.

19 posted on 09/06/2005 4:51:42 PM PDT by skimbell (Now in its 42nd year and still no Exit Strategy for the War on Poverty.)
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To: conservativecorner
Celebrities who have been out front trying to use their people power to help Americans in need have shown the "right stuff" and deserve to be lauded. Last week, Matt Lauer hosted an NBC fund-raising telethon featuring Connick, Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Mike Myers, Aaron Neville, Kanye West, Hilary Swank, Lindsay Lohan, Glenn Close, Richard Gere, John Goodman and Leonardo DiCaprio.

There's a slight contradiction in the story. Why should we laud a punk like Kayne West?

20 posted on 09/06/2005 4:51:49 PM PDT by frogjerk (LIBERALISM - Being miserable for no good reason)
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